Ted Gould wrote: > Dragos Neagu wrote: > >> I'm looking for something to help me take care of my personal >> finances. I've used gnucash before but on ubuntu it wants like 45 >> other packages :-p What do you guys use/recommend? > > > I use GNUCash and just download the 45 packages :( It seems like > GNUCash doesn't have a good development methodology overall (too many > dependencies, too many custom widgets), but I haven't found anything > better. I'd love to have a GTK+ 2 piece of financial software that was > much cleaner. I keep hoping that GNUCash will morph into that, but > they're already on GTK+ 2.8 and GNUCash still hasn't made the switch. > I think they are close to having a gtk2.x version. In fact, I think it is in Debian experimental. They have done a lot of code cleanup, but the dependency hell still exists. I don't see much hope of that improving. The developers are well... How do you say it politely.... Set in their ways? It is by far the most functional and reliable out there that I have found, but has a hard time attracting developers because it is written in C with a healthy dose of scheme. I don't like working on C (much less scheme) when I am getting paid, so you can forget about it for volunteer work. I suspect I am not the only one in that boat. Developers that like to code in C in their spare time, seem to have little problem compiling 45 packages to do a build on a piece of software. Thus, you won't see it go away. As to them it isn't a problem. :) -- Derek "mini rant" Neighbors --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss